Some geometry problems are easy to state but hard to solve! For any triangle, can an ideal point-sized billiard ball bounce around inside in a ππππππππ trajectory - a path that repeats?
The answer is "yes" for acute triangles, and this has been known since 1775. It's also "yes" for right triangles. But for obtuse triangles, nobody knows!
In 2008, Richard Schwartz showed that the answer is "yes" for triangles with angles of 100Β° or less. He broke the problem down into cases and checked each case with the help of a computer. Then progress was stuck... until 2018, when Jacob Garber, Boyan Marinov, Kenneth Moore and George Tokarsky showed the answer is "yes" for triangles with angles of 112.3Β° or less.
Beyond that we're stuck.... except for triangles with all πππ‘πππππ angles (measured in degrees). For them too the answer is "yes".
The picture here is from
George Tokarsky, Jacob Garber, Boyan Marinov, Kenneth Moore, One hundred and twelve point three degree theorem, https://arxiv.org/abs/1808.06667
and for more check out this article on Quanta:
https://www.quantamagazine.org/the-mysterious-math-of-billiards-tables-20240215/